Recently we had to investigate a page that had very poor performance. The project used newrelic, but neither that, the application’s logs nor render traces gave clear results. The database wasn’t the bottleneck, but there were well over 100 partials in the render trace. These partials seemed to perform well, except sometimes the same partial would take hundreds to thousands of milliseconds.

As it turns out, the cause of these random delays was actually garbage collection triggered by abusive memory consumption within many of the partials – millions of objects and heap growth in excess of 100mb. We discovered this by using the memory and GC statistics features of Ruby Enterprise Edition. You can get an idea of how much memory is being used and garbage collected during rendering by wrapping parts of your page in a block passed to this helper:

Because there were so many partials on the page, moving the helper around to identify the most egregious memory abusers got tiring so I wrote a monkeypatch to the venerable Rack::Bug plug-in which shows you memory consumption and garbage collection statistics for each template shown in the Rack::Bug template trace, as well as on the memory panel.

First, install Rack::Bug and make sure it’s working properly, then add the code below in an initializer. Keep in mind this was written to work with Ruby Enterprise Edition 1.8.7 2010.02. Various 1.8 patches and Ruby 1.9 also provide some GC statistics reporting tools which you could probably customize this patch to use instead.